Amarillo is a small, tight coworking market — five real options, not fifty. That's actually good news: you can compare all of them in an afternoon, and prices run well below what you'd pay in Austin or Dallas. Open-desk memberships here start around $91–$150 a month, day passes are about $25, and private offices land in the $259–$550 range depending on the address.
This guide covers every legitimate coworking space in Amarillo as of 2026 — The Union Hall Workspace near Wolflin, Revolution at 800, The Assembly@nobox on the west side, Regus downtown, and Downtown Tower Executive Suites. No filler, no invented spaces — just an honest read on which one fits how you work.
Sitting in the Wolflin/Olsen area just off I-40, The Union Hall Workspace is the most approachable entry point in town. Open-desk memberships start around $91/month and dedicated desks around $184/month, with $25 day passes if you just need a quiet spot for the afternoon. Meeting rooms rent from about $15/hour and drop-in private offices from $50/day.
What sets it apart is the all-in feel: utilities, fast wifi, free printing, community events, and free Palace Coffee (a local favorite) are bundled in. If you're a freelancer, remote worker, or solo founder who wants a friendly, non-corporate room without a downtown price tag, this is the one to try first.
Three of Amarillo's five spaces cluster along Polk and Tyler downtown. Revolution at 800 (800 S. Polk St., in the historic Levine's building) is run by the WT Enterprise Center and leans hardest into the startup and entrepreneur community — collaborative membership runs about $150/month, a private workstation $350, and a private office $500, all with 24/7 access, conference rooms, and a training room. Downtown Tower Executive Suites & Coworking (600 S. Tyler St., in the Amarillo Tower) is the budget downtown pick, with coworking memberships from roughly $129/month and private offices up to about $259 — plus a receptionist, break room, and even a fitness-center membership.
If you want a recognizable national brand and turnkey serviced offices, Regus (301 S. Polk St., 5th floor) rounds out the downtown trio with furnished offices, a coworking lounge, staffed reception, and meeting rooms on flexible terms — typically the priciest of the three but the most hands-off.
If heads-down privacy matters more than a bustling common room, The Assembly@nobox is Amarillo's boutique answer. It's on the west side at 4211 I-40 W (Chicago Title Building, just off I-40 and Western), and it's built almost entirely around fully furnished private offices rather than open coworking. Leases start around $550/month.
Each office includes wifi, printer and office-supply access, conference-room use, and a stocked kitchen. It's aimed at solopreneurs, remote professionals, and small teams who want an upscale, quiet, west-side base away from downtown foot traffic. For a team that needs a private office but a cheaper rate, Downtown Tower's ~$259 private suites are worth a second look.
Amarillo is meaningfully cheaper than the big Texas metros. Expect roughly $25 for a day pass, $91–$150/month for an open or collaborative desk, $184–$350/month for a dedicated desk or private workstation, and $259–$550/month for a private office depending on location and finish level.
West-side and boutique space (The Assembly@nobox) sits at the top of that range; independent community space (The Union Hall) sits at the bottom; and the downtown cluster spans the middle. Most memberships bundle wifi, coffee, printing, and meeting-room time, so compare the all-in number rather than the headline rate.
Browse all Amarillo spaces on the map →For a full membership, The Union Hall Workspace has the lowest open-desk rate (around $91/month), and Downtown Tower Executive Suites is the cheapest downtown option (from about $129/month). If you only need occasional access, The Union Hall's $25 day pass is the least expensive way to try coworking in Amarillo.
Yes. The Union Hall Workspace offers open-desk day passes for about $25/day and drop-in private offices from around $50/day, plus meeting rooms from roughly $15/hour. It's the most flexible choice if you don't want to commit to a monthly plan. Other spaces lean more toward memberships and office leases, so call ahead to confirm drop-in availability.
Downtown (Revolution at 800, Regus, and Downtown Tower — all along Polk and Tyler) is best if you want a central business address, a startup community, or a national brand. The Assembly@nobox on I-40 and Western is the pick if you're west of downtown and want a quiet, private office. The Union Hall near Wolflin/Olsen splits the difference with easy I-40 access and a community vibe.
The Assembly@nobox specializes in fully furnished private offices (from around $550/month) with conference-room access and a stocked kitchen. For a lower rate, Downtown Tower Executive Suites offers private offices up to about $259/month, and Revolution at 800 has private offices around $500 with 24/7 access and a training room.
Some do. Revolution at 800 advertises 24/7 member access, and serviced providers like Regus typically offer extended or around-the-clock entry on the right plan. Community spaces like The Union Hall generally center on staffed business hours plus event times, so if late-night or weekend access is essential, confirm it with the specific space before you sign up.